The Mail-Journal, Volume 15, Number 36, Milford, Kosciusko County, 27 September 1978 — Page 20
bmR nt „ 3ft VMIIMiMIMMK V<* fw it', jii i»J CUKsWfi) I "fl K 4 ' \ •|F * iWmk... ... k * v A V—lWwlalH I JL * •’&* 'IdEI aBF 1 - ‘ KJkJB a -■■ -.• y : ’ y - > Its the incredible fltf ■ Le Chef Food Processor from Sunbeam. I love to cook—whenever I can spare the time. But recipes that call for half a day's chopping, pureeing and slicing really intimidated me! Now, with my Sunbeam Le Chef Food Processoi; I can do those jobs in seconds. Really! For entertaining, and for everyday dishes too. What's so special about Sunbeam Le Chef? The motor is surprisingly quiet and powerful. Sunbeam calls it direct drive. I call it incredible. It easily kneads stiff yeast dough without stalling. Its super capacity container lets me prepare enough for a crowd, all at once. The Touch On pulse control instantly regulates action, so I'm less likely to over-process by mistake. I The Sunbeam Le Chef comes with 4 processing blades and discs, for handling each job just right. The multi- H purpose blade for minced onions or homemade hamburger, the shredding disc for cheddar cheese or cole slaw. The slicing disc turns out perfect, even slices of vege- ’ I tables or sausage. I use the mixing blade for cake \ r. . ■ batter and desserts. There's even a handy spatula and a complete 64-page recipe book included. H k Le Chef, the amazing, indispensable food processor for everything from apple pancakes to zucchini. From my favorite appliance company. Who else but I
Maybe we’ve gone too far with fighting noise pollution, comments the Fairfield (Iowa) Ledger, because it is getting so you can’t even hear opportunity knock. An optimist, according to the Morris (Minn.) Tribune, is a husband who doubleparks while his wife runs into the store for just a minute. The following poem is offered by the Houston (Mo.) Herald: Some day I’d like to meet that most Uncommon he or she Who says, when shown a photograph, “That’s very good of me.” This is from the Savannah (Mo.) Reporter: A battery of pollsters called people and asked, “What’s the principal sickness in America today, ignorance or apathy?” the most common answer was, “I don’t know and I don’t care." If you want to do something really different on your vacation, spend it within your income, advises The DeSmet (S-D.) News. “Do something every day to make other people happy,” advised the Dwight (III.) Star and Herald, “even if it is only to let them alone.” There are three periods in life, says the Morris (Minn.) Tribune; youth, middle age and ‘how well you look .” The Adair County Free Press of Greenfield, lowa says the trouble with most of us is that we would rather be ruined by praise than saved by criticism. The Sisseton (S.D.) Courier quotes the fellow who said he was the youngest of fourteen children and was 20 years old before he found out there were other parts to a chicken besides gravy. The Manning (Iowa) Monitor sayS, “Most of us are too fond of people who agree with us and food that doesn’t.” The Wayne County Press of Fairfield, 111. comments, “When the going seems easy, it could be that you are just going downhill.” According to the latest statistics, says the Denver (Iowa) Forum, more people are run down by gossip than by automobiles. “Never underestimate a woman,” advises the West Bend (Wis.) News, “unless you are talking about her age or weight.” The Times Record of Aledo, 111. says, “What this country needs are some colleges that teach everything the students think they already know.” The Review of Plymouth, Wis. tells the following: The boss hired a young man and told him, “Now your first job will be to sweep out the office.” “But I’m a college graduate," protested the young man. “Well, then,” said the boss, “hand me the broom and I’ll show you how." The Mercer County Chronicle of Coldwater, Ohio, comments, “Teenagers haven’t changed much, they still grow up, leave home and get married. Today, however, they don’t necessarily do it in that order.” The Fort Madison (Iowa) Democrat reports that population trends and mortality rates indicate that older women will be running things in the 21st century. Or can it be that at that point we will finally get around to admitting that it has been that way all along? The Owatonna (Minn.) People’s Press comments, “Remember when the only thing that annoyed you about television was the poor reception?” The Grafton (N.D.) Record says there are two reasons why women have large hips: one is the invention of the riding lawnmower and the other is that women take things sitting down, like cookies and cake and . . . The Lake Mills (Iowa) Graphic quotes the father who said to his teenage son, “Maybe you should start shifting for yourself now while you still know everything.”
#'■. ■■ ■ I
I Grassroots I ? Gleanings x < by Bill Stokes 1
